68 , 1\ TEVER a complexion .J.. '- thought! Women know that Glyco Thymo- line Soap may be depended upon to keep their skins fair and smooth. This new soap adds a note of luxury to the toilet, cleanses thor- oughly and quickly and leaves the skin soft and velvety smooth. 2Smzt5 '... " R.ECENT BOOKS Renazssance If . , It. TITERATURE L is looking ." up. There are at Ie as t three new novels. this week that are worth your attention. First, of course, is "Homeplace," Maristan Chapman's encore to "The Happy Mountain." Mrs. Chapman's second book is not so much a novel as a ballad in prose form. This chronicler of life in the southern mountains writes as though her books were meant to be sung, not read. Capricious Bess Howard of Glen Hazard is a literary descend- ant of a North-of-England ballad heroine, and Mrs. Chapman tells her romance in archaic English that gives you the feeling of re-learning an old forgotten language. The joy of Mrs. Chapman's writing lies in the absence of any tourist-like sentimental snobbery. She has none of the "how quaint" attitude of a sub- urban matron in ,an antique shoppe. Her hill folk are human beings and not specimens in the collection of a literary lady. And, of course, she has a fine ear for dialect. She writes nat- urally in a language that, in spite of its strangeness, you feel is a living and spoken tongue. Mrs. Chapman is so completely at her ease in this vocabu- lary that the glossary at the back of the book is unnecessary for those whose knowledge of the English language goes farther back than the machine- gun and night-club era. As for the story itself, it is the sim- plest of romances, and as free of artificial effects as a nursery rhyme. Both plot and setting are innocently and restfully rural. It is good to know that 'somewhere in this country there are green fields, trees, and streams that aren't part of a golf course, and that there are country people who have not yet started filling-stations and hot-dog stands. Mrs. Chapman catches the shy charm of these hideaway moun- taineers who, because of their aloofness, are usually represented as low-grade white savages. T HOSE big strong men who guide the nation's destiny by day, and rest their brains by reading detective stories after treaty-signing hours, are gOIng to be shocked, not to say flabber- AVCiUST I 7, I' 2, , ; st, - ::... "';,' , .:.: g, \ ". , ,... ', , \' " i'.:. . .f. . . . t.' . . ...,: - ,. . . .' I , i I !; Some roomy 2 room suites . . . plenty large enough to comfort- ' ably house 3 people. . . and some livable 1, 2 and 3 room apart- , ments with or without porches, , are available-furnished if desir- ed. Immediate or Fall occupancy. Maid service, of course, serving pantries,roofsolarium,restaurant UVTf' I. \\11 1) 1\1U E t.f>f> ",EST I> J\'&'Æ. CQANf NO ST (" HENRY F. RITCHEY f.c MANAGING DIRECTOR .' - :;f::;!? "'" . .-' "ß7 . . : . r;.' .' "", , .1!;;1. ' ..' '. . : . : . "J:'_ ' " . , , ." . . ., /: : ',:.; - j > ) , -on the best end of West End Avenue SCORE: CAVIARETTES 100 Other Sports 0 Athletic and high mental family loses all indoor and cutdoor sports except Caviarettes at which pastime all run up tremendous record-breaking average. .. Bridge- forty dollars "Cons. Gravies an hour" down 40 points" The most enlivening opening chorus to a menu is made up of cocktails, caviar and CaVlarettes. 'I'he Caviarettes supply the stage for the caviar. These are "raised edge" biscuit crisps which hold the caviar, and other tidbits. Fie on fussy preparation 1 CAVIARETTE Rea. U. S. Pat. OJ/. At most high grade MOps,. If you do not locate Cavi&rettes. send dealer's nnme and $2 for tin of Au Gourmet Caviar and gay tin of 36 Caviarettes. For $10 we send through your dealer, case of 14 unusual European tidbits, including caviar, CaviaretteB, vege- tables. cheese. fruit, jams, etc. Address MEYER & LAXGE 434 Greenwich St., New York, N. Y. HAt' Gourmet"" Caviar H Grand Duke" Ca.viar